Friday, May 5, 2023

jason hirschhorn's @MusicREDEF: 05/05/2023 - Ed Sheeran Can Get Back to Work, Touring & Mental Health, Jai Paul, Whyte Fang, the Blog Era...

I am just a guy with a guitar who loves writing music for people to enjoy. I am not and will never allow myself to be a piggy bank for anyone to shake.
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Friday May 05, 2023
REDEF
A relieved Ed Sheeran meets the press after being found not liable for copyright infringement, New York, May 4, 2023.
(Alexi J. Rosenfeld/Getty Images)
quote of the day
"I am just a guy with a guitar who loves writing music for people to enjoy. I am not and will never allow myself to be a piggy bank for anyone to shake."
- Ed Sheeran
rantnrave://
Subtraction

"It looks like I'm not having to retire from my day job after all," ED SHEERAN told reporters Thursday afternoon outside the New York courthouse where a jury had just cleared him of the accusation he'd plagiarized MARVIN GAYE. Sheeran was jokingly referencing his own threat, blurted out in anger from the witness stand three days earlier, that if he lost the case, "I'm done, I'm stopping." He didn't want to keep making music if every song he wrote was going to be an invitation to legal retribution. Understandable, especially coming from a songwriter who'd been through the same legal wringer before. Writing songs with the wrong chord progression, or insufficiently original syncopation, shouldn't be up there with cheating on your taxes or stealing Sudafed in the eyes of the law. We needn't, and shouldn't, have chord progression police.

But Sheeran proved to be a model defendant and I think, therefore, we did need to have this exact trial. This puts me at odds not only with Sheeran but with most of the music industry and most of the legal analysts who've been insisting that the case, brought by the family of Gaye's collaborator ED TOWNSEND, should never have gone to trial and could have upended the recording and publishing businesses if the plaintiffs had prevailed. They said Sheeran targeted for nothing more than being a working songwriter and musician, and that his song "THINKING OUT LOUD" sounded nothing like Gaye's "LET'S GET IT ON" anyway.

They were partly right about the first half of that and partly wrong about the second half. Here's ADAM NEELY, a jazz musician and one of the internet's more astute musicologists, on the similarities between the songs: "The drum grooves are identical, the bass line is the same, the chord progressions are nearly identical, the harmonic rhythm is the same and the melodies are phrased very similarly—they both backphrase off of beat one, they emphasize the third degree of the scale and resolve to the first degree of the scale." They kind of do, in other words, sound alike. But that should never have been the question. The question should have been: So what?

Here's Neely again: "The practice of copying bass lines from earlier work to create new compositions is the very foundation of how Western music was written, how it was taught and how it was developed for the past several hundred years." Within musical styles ranging from Renaissance-era church music to 20th- and 21st-century pop soul balladry, songs sound like each other not only because of influence and coincidence, but because of the very idea of style. If you don't syncopate the melody in a certain way, you aren't going to have a pop soul ballad at all. Songwriters copy because copying is one of the ways songwriting works.

That's not exactly how the argument came out at trial, but it did come out, and Ed Sheeran seems to have done so more effectively than any of the other pop and rock stars who've been in similar situations in recent years, from ROBIN THICKE and PHARRELL to LED ZEPPELIN to KATY PERRY. For starters, Sheeran showed up in court every day. He was *present*. He had a story to tell.

He testified persuasively, passionately and articulately, often with guitar in hand. He talked about influence (it wasn't Marvin Gaye in this case, he insisted, it was VAN MORRISON). He strummed the guitar and sang, from the witness stand, to demonstrate how so many of our favorite songs use the same chords in the same sequence. He explained how he and his fellow songwriters use those generic chords as building blocks for their non-generic art. He literally told the jury, "Most pop songs can fit over most pop songs." He was funny sometimes, and angry other times, describing why he didn't want to be there, and what it meant that he was there. It was a master class in both process and emotion.

It was easy to walk away from it thinking that Sheeran was testifying not only to the panel of jurors sitting in front of him, but to all of us: to all the fans and gawkers following Ed Sheeran songwriting court as closely as they'd followed GWYNETH PALTROW skiing court, to all the future plagiarism plaintiffs and all the future judges who'll be assigned their cases, to everyone in the business wondering how to move beyond this seemingly endless cycle of lawsuits, to KATHRYN GRIFFIN TOWNSEND, who helped bring the suit on behalf of her late father's legacy. She and Sheeran hugged and shared some words after the verdict was read, and she later told reporters, "If we had been able to just talk, we wouldn't be here today." And maybe now that we've all had this talk, we won't have to be here tomorrow.

Addition

Since he doesn't have to stop after all, Sheeran is free to promote his fifth album, SUBTRACT, which arrived at midnight ET, less than eight hours after the verdict was read. (Best album promo campaign ever?) It's a deeply emotional album, created in the midst of a series of dark events in Sheeran's life: the death of his best friend, British media music mogul Jamal Edwards; his wife's cancer diagnosis; his own spiraling depression, and, not coincidentally, the shadow of both of his plagiarism trials. The songwriting was part of his therapy, and he had a new collaborator, Aaron Dessner, who co-wrote and produced most of the album and told Sheeran he "would love to hear him in a more vulnerable, more sort of elemental way." An "exposed-nerve feel... recurs throughout," Maura Johnston writes in Rolling Stone, under a headline that declares, "Ed Sheeran Battles Depression And Wins." USA Today's Melissa Ruggieri says Sheeran "drowns in grief, then shoots up for air."

Also today: New music from Billy Woods & Kenny Segal, IDK, Conway the Machine, Fred Again & Brian Eno, Peter One, Jidenna, Destroy Lonely, Atmosphere, OhGeesy, Jeleel!, Justin Moore, Megan Moroney, the late Olivia Newton-John (duets collection including a version of "Jolene" recorded shortly before her death, with Dolly Parton), the Lemon Twigs, Nanna (solo debut from Of Monsters and Men singer/guitarist), Smashing Pumpkins, Grandson, Durand Jones, Gord Downie & Bob Rock (posthumous release of an album the late Tragically Hip singer spent years working on with the rock and metal producer), Artemis, Avishai Cohen & Abraham Rodriguez Jr., Asher Gamedze, Jeff Coffin, Alison Brown, Rodney Crowell, Logan Halstead, Sqürl (Jim Jarmusch & Carter Logan), yMusic, Dave Lombardo (Slayer and Mr. Bungle drummer's solo debut), Death Goals, Drain, Jeromes Dream, Immaterial Possession, Angelica Olstad, SBTRKT, Flume, Kwes, Nxxxxxs, Aime Simone, Mareux, felicita, Beta Librae, Lcy, Olivia Jean, the Album Leaf, Westerman, Emily King, Ana Popovic, Greg Mendez, Michael Cormier-O'Leary, Jenny Owen Youngs, Sue Clayton and Cloth.

Rest in Peace

British pop/soul singer—and in-demand backing vocalist—LINDA LEWIS.

- Matty Karas, curator
court
Rolling Stone
'A Sigh of Relief:' What Ed Sheeran's Victory Means for the Future of Music Copyright Claims
By Ethan Millman
Experts say Sheeran's win is a positive step for artists and could help slow down the litigious nature of music copyright.
Rolling Stone
Ed Sheeran Confesses: Tears, Trauma, and Those Bad Habits
By Brian Hiatt
When he became a dad, his 'party boy' days ended. Then tragedy struck, forcing him to face his hidden dark side -- and hit his hottest creative streak.
Variety
'Touring and Mental Health' Manual Is a Godsend for Musicians and Crew
By Ryan Dusick
When I left the band Maroon 5 in 2006 due to chronic injuries rendering me unable to perform, I could barely wrap my head around what was happening to me, let alone understand what had caused it.
Billboard
Billboard Introduces 'Fan Packs' to Album Charts
By Elias Leight
The Billboard 200 will count some package offerings of music and collectibles as fans seek to support their favorite acts through merch purchases.
The New York Times
Jai Paul Emerges From the Shadows, Somewhat
By Jon Caramanica, Lindsay Zoladz and Jia Tolentino
The elusive vocalist and producer performed his first shows last month. Do they mark the end of an arc, or a new beginning?
The FADER
What do rappers lose when they give fans their grails?
By Jordan Darville
Pi'erre Bourne's "Grails" and Lil Yachty's "Holster" are the latest releases that heed listeners' desires for specific songs that have been previewed as snippets. But does it come with a cost?
Trapital
Where Are Music Tech's Billion-Dollar Exits
By Dan Runcie
Only nine music companies have reached that status since 2010. It's a stat that concerns VCs who shy away from music because they see it as a cottage industry with small total addressable markets and powerful incumbents.
VAN Magazine
Why the San Francisco Conservatory of Music has gone on a buying spree
By Jeffrey Arlo Brown
In October 2020, the San Francisco Conservatory of Music acquired the management company Opus 3 Artists. In May 2022, the conservatory bought the boutique Dutch record label Pentatone. And in December 2022, SFCM added the prestigious London agency Askonas Holt to its portfolio.
The Blog Era
‎The Blog Era Ep. 4: We Need a Board
By Eric Rosenthal, Jeff Rosenthal and ItsTheReal
In 2008, bloggers - who discovered, posted and leaked records with impunity - built momentum. With the spread of these mp3 websites from big cities to unheard-of regions, power was steadily being seized from the record labels. But there was also a harsh reality: blogs weren't making any money.
Los Angeles Times
How millennials came to unironically love yacht-rock kings Steely Dan
By Alex Pappademas
Steely Dan's songs of monied decadence, druggy disconnection and self-destructive escapism seemed satirically extreme way back when. Now they just seem prophetic.
spark
The Guardian
My band got big thanks to the UK's small venues. We can't let them die out
By Rou Reynolds and Enter Shikari
Many of the venues that nurtured us have now closed. We're donating £1 per ticket of our upcoming arena tour to preserve the rest – and it should become standard practice.
Music Business Worldwide
'We need to find a fair way to compensate songwriters, because we can't survive. Well, I can survive, but I'm terrified for the next generation'
By Mark Sutherland
Liz Rose on becoming a superstar songwriter by accident, Taylor Swift, telling stories, selling catalogs and why current payment models urgently need overhauling.
Billboard
The Coachella Live Debut of Alison Wonderland's Whyte Fang Project Brought Her a Major Streaming Boost -- And She Did It While 8 Months Pregnant
By Valerie Lee
"The best thing I actually did for my pregnancy was to keep living my life and letting the baby cook while living my life," the producer says.
NPR
The unstoppable appeal of Peso Pluma and the Regional Mexican music scene
By Vanessa Romo
He delighted audiences at Coachella, made history on The Tonight Show, and he's got hit after hit after hit on multiple music charts.
Pollstar
NITO President Frank Riley Talks Ticketing, Advocacy & Indie Solidarity
By Debbie Speer
Riley's National Independent Talent Organization wants primary ticketsellers to be banned from participating in, or profiting from, resales. It also wants fuller fee transparency, and it wants artists and their representatives to have the ability to access their own ticket buyer data.
Music Ally
The localisation of Western pop music in China
By XinYue
Since the 1970s, China has gone through stages of learning from "foreign goods" to "self-creation" and then to "integration and absorption" as Western music exploded in popularity. During this process, Chinese music has embarked on a path of localization and diversification.
FLOOD Magazine
Atmosphere on Taking the Bold Stance That Things Just Might Be OK with Their New Album
By Soren Baker
Although "So Many Other Realities Exist Simultaneously" was created during a tumultuous time, Slug and Ant say there's optimism in their latest collection of songs.
Los Angeles Times
Twenty years after country music canceled the Chicks, they have no regrets: 'It set us free'
By Mikael Wood
Ahead of their Las Vegas residency, the Chicks hold forth on their exile from Nashville, how songs change over time and why Beyoncé is the new Boss.
Penny Fractions
There Is Too Much Music Out There (Part 1)
By David Turner
The promise of an endless catalog for cheap is incredibly appealing. Yet, that dream is hitting a changing reality.
American Institute of Physics
Lead-vocal level in recordings of popular music 1946–2020
By Karsten Gerdes and Kai Siedenburg
The level of lead vocals in representative recordings of popular music have decreased until the mid 1970s and remained relatively constant from thereafter.
what we're into
Music of the day
"End of Youth"
Ed Sheeran
"Is this the ending of our youth when pain starts taking over?" From "Subtract," out today on Asylum/Atlantic.
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